Archive for the ‘Harborfest’ tag
Downtown Waterfront Revitalization
Cannonball Trail
Downtown Waterfront Revitalization
Location: East end of Town Point Park, near the intersection of Waterside Dr & Martins Ln, Norfolk, VA 23510
Visited: July 3, 2009, 11:30am
Transcription of marker: In the 1950s the waterfront contained an assortment of aging facilities — wharves, warehouses, rail lines, ship chandlers, tugboat operations, and ferry docks. The City of Norfolk made a significant decision. An area of downtown along the Elizabeth River should be transformed from a working waterfront into a public waterfront. As the old was cleared, the new appeared, beginning with the public esplanade and hotel in 1974. The first Harborfest celebration in 1977 demonstrated that public attractions could help revitalize downtown. Town Point Park and the Waterside Festival Marketplace opened in 1983. Nauticus, the National Maritime Center, anchored the west end of the waterfront in 1994.
The three cannons at the head of Otter Berth were found during the dredging of this part of the waterfront in 1982. They are of unknown foreign origin, but their vintage is compatible with the bombardment of Norfolk on January 1, 1776. Otter Berth is named for HMS Otter, one of Lord Dunmore’s ships that bombarded Norfolk on January 1, 1776.
My impressions: It seems quite fitting for me to have seen this marker on the first day of this year’s Harborfest. Nice when coincidences like that happen. It’s funny that, even though there are stretches of “working waterfront” not too far away, I find it impossible to think about Norfolk without its park beside the river. It is my favorite part of Norfolk’s downtown.
Another thing I like is in the last paragraph of the marker, where there is an acknowledgment that we don’t know everything about history, such as the exact origin of the cannons in the park (which, I have to admit, I don’t recall seeing). It would have been all to easy to make leaps to a presumed origin for them, and while the marker comes close to that, it acknowledges the lack of knowledge and allows the reader to make a guess as to the answer.
But most of all, I’m just glad the waterfront is there to be enjoyed.
Markeroni status: Direct-logged.